This module extends the Islandora batch framework to provide a Drush command to ingest compound objects. Currently, only batches of compound objects that have a "flat" structure are supported. In other words, batches of compound objects whose children do not contain other children:
batch_directory/
├── compound_object_1
│ ├── child_1
│ ├── child_2
│ └── child_3
├── compound_object_2
│ ├── child_1
│ └── child_2
└── compound_object_3
├── child_1
├── child_2
├── child_3
└── child_4
The ingest is a four-step process:
Step 2, generating structure files, is accomplished by running a standalone PHP script on the directory containing your objects. The last two are drush commands similar to those provided by other Islandora Batch modules. Details on each step are provided below.
Note that the predicate in child objects' RELS-EXT datastream that relates them to their parent is the one that is defined in the Compound Solution Pack's "Child relationship predicate" admin setting. By default this is isConstituentOf
.
This module requires the following modules/libraries:
Install as usual, see this for further information.
There are no configuration options for this module.
To prepare your compound objects, arrange them in a directory structure so that each parent object is in its own directory beneath the input directory, and within each parent object, each child object is in its own subdirectory. Each parent should contain a MODS.xml file, which is a sibling to the child object directories. Each child object directory should contain a MODS.xml file and must contain a file corresponding to the OBJ datastream. This file must be named OBJ and use an extension that will determine the content model to use for the child object. A sample input directory is:
input_directory
├── parent_one
│ ├── first_child
│ │ ├── MODS.xml
│ │ └── OBJ.jp2
│ ├── second_child
│ │ ├── MODS.xml
│ │ └── OBJ.jp2
│ └── MODS.xml
└── parent_two
├── first_child
│ ├── MODS.xml
│ └── OBJ.jp2
├── second_child
│ ├── MODS.xml
│ └── OBJ.jp2
└── MODS.xml
The names of the parent and child directories don't matter, but the names of the files within them do, as explained below.
This module will ingest objects that do not have the 'islandora:compoundCmodel' content model if a file named OBJ
is in the parent's directory. The content model assigned to the parent object is determined by the extension of the OBJ file. For example, if OBJ.pdf
is present in the parent_one
directory, that object will be assigned the 'islandora:sp_pdf' content model and will have the OBJ.pdf
file as its OBJ datastream, and will also have first_child
and second_child
as children:
input_directory
├── parent_one
│ ├── first_child
│ │ ├── MODS.xml
│ │ └── OBJ.jp2
│ ├── second_child
│ │ ├── MODS.xml
│ │ └── OBJ.jp2
│ └── OBJ.pdf
│ └── MODS.xml
└── parent_two
├── first_child
│ ├── MODS.xml
│ └── OBJ.jp2
├── second_child
│ ├── MODS.xml
│ └── OBJ.jp2
└── MODS.xml
Once you have your content arranged, you will need to generate a 'structure file' for each object. To do this, run the create_structure_files.php
script in this module's extras/scripts directory: php create_structure_files.php path/to/directory/containing/compound_objects
. Running this script will add a structure.xml
file to each parent object:
input_directory
├── parent_one
│ ├── first_child
│ │ ├── MODS.xml
│ │ └── OBJ.jp2
│ ├── second_child
│ │ ├── MODS.xml
│ │ └── OBJ.jp2
│ └── MODS.xml
│ └── structure.xml
└── parent_two
├── first_child
│ ├── MODS.xml
│ └── OBJ.jp2
├── second_child
│ ├── MODS.xml
│ └── OBJ.jp2
└── MODS.xml
└── structure.xml
If necessary, you can edit an object's structure.xml
file to ensure that the children are in the order you want them to be in when they are ingested into the compound object in Islandora. The structure.xml
files look like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<islandora_compound_object title="parent_one">
<child content="parent_one/first_child"/>
<child content="parent_one/second_child"/>
</islandora_compound_object>
The value of the content attribute of each <child>
element is the name of the parent directory, followed by a forward slash /
, then the name the subdirectory containing the child object's MODS and OBJ files. The title
attribute of the <islandora_compound_object>
element is only used if the directory does not contain a MODS.xml file. Otherwise, the title assigned in the MODS file is used. Each structure.xml
file also contains a comment explaining how the file is interpreted by the Islandora Compound Batch module (the comment is omitted in this example for brevity).
After you have prepared your content, the remaining steps are much like those required by other Islandora Batch drush scripts.
The batch preprocessor is called as a drush script (see drush help islandora_compound_batch_preprocess
for additional parameters):
Drush made the target
parameter reserved as of Drush 7. To allow for backwards compatability this will be preserved.
Drush 7 and above:
drush -v --user=admin islandora_compound_batch_preprocess --scan_target=/path/to/input/directory --namespace=mynamespace --parent=mynamespace:collection
Drush 6 and below:
drush -v --user=admin islandora_compound_batch_preprocess --target=/path/to/input/directory --namespace=mynamespace --parent=mynamespace:collection
This will populate the queue (stored in the Drupal database) with base entries.
The queue of preprocessed items is then processed by running the ingest command:
drush -v --user=admin islandora_batch_ingest
This module records parent-child relationships in a database table. Periodically, you should prune this table by running the following command:
drush --user=admin islandora_compound_batch_prune_relationships
This command will remove relationships associated with Islandora batch sets that have been deleted. Relationships associated with batch sets that have not been deleted will remain in the database.
This module determines which content model to assign to child objects based on the extension of the child's OBJ file. The mapping used is:
jpeg => islandora:sp_basic_image
jpg => islandora:sp_basic_image
jpeg => islandora:sp_basic_image
gif => islandora:sp_basic_image
png => islandora:sp_basic_image
tif => islandora:sp_large_image_cmodel
tiff => islandora:sp_large_image_cmodel
jp2 => islandora:sp_large_image_cmodel
pdf => islandora:sp_pdf
mp3 => islandora:sp-audioCModel
mp4a => islandora:sp-audioCModel
m4a => islandora:sp-audioCModel
oga => islandora:sp-audioCModel
ogg => islandora:sp-audioCModel
flac => islandora:sp-audioCModel
wav => islandora:sp-audioCModel
mp4 => islandora:sp_videoCModel
m4v => islandora:sp_videoCModel
mkv => islandora:sp_videoCModel
mpeg => islandora:sp_videoCModel
mpe => islandora:sp_videoCModel
mpg => islandora:sp_videoCModel
qt => islandora:sp_videoCModel
mov => islandora:sp_videoCModel
ogv => islandora:sp_videoCModel
You can override these mappings by providing a comma-separated list of extension-to-cmodel mappings in the optional --content_models
drush option, like this:
drush -v --user=admin islandora_compound_batch_preprocess --content_models=pdf::islandora:fooCModel --target=/path/to/input/directory --namespace=mynamespace --parent=mynamespace:collection
or
drush -v --user=admin islandora_compound_batch_preprocess --content_models=pdf::islandora:fooCModel,jpg::islandora:bar_cmodel --target=/path/to/input/directory --namespace=mynamespace --parent=mynamespace:collection
Please open an issue in this Github repo's issue queue.
Pull requests are welcome, as are use cases and suggestions.